ePortfolio Workshop: Marketing Your Experiences
In this workshop, you will learn how to market your experiences – whether they are study abroad/internships abroad, club or campus involvement, volunteering, or others. We will be hosting this workshop with guests from the Career Connections Center to provide insight on how to articulate your skills and how to best incorporate them into your …
UF Synergies: Transnational Migration in Networks across Borders in the Americas
Please pre-register for the event through the Zoom link. Oren Okhovat (History), Rothman Doctoral Fellow: “Portuguese Jewish Curaçao and the Broader Atlantic World: Economic Pragmatism, Cultural Fluidity, and its Legacy in the Early Modern Caribbean” The Dutch Caribbean island of Curaçao served as a nexus for commercial and social interactions in a complex and interconnected …
No End in Sight? Epidemic Temporalities and Narratives in Modern Europe
Dr. Dora Vargha, University of Exeter Click here to register In the past year more people have become familiar with the graph of the epidemic curve than ever before. Beginnings, peaks and endings of COVID-19 occupy everyday discussions, inform policies, shape social interactions and provide bases for criticism and political action. What constitutes an ending, when that …
Conversations in the Neighborhood: Food Access: Race, Class, and the Environment
How do race, class, and the environment influence food access and food choices? Using COVID 19 as the backdrop, this panel examines the state of food security and challenges in Gainesville: What are the barriers to food access in Gainesville? What are the political outcomes? More information about the event here.
The Executive Power and the Constitution
Hosted by The Florida Council for History Education One of the great challenges facing students of the presidency today has been to reconcile the extraordinary powers of the executive with democracy. This seminar will examine the major questions and controversies about executive power under the Constitution including the war power, the treaty power, and the …
2020-2021 FLDH Webinar Series: Primary Source Literacy: Teaching a Diverse Florida through Online Public History Collections
When students engage with local primary source materials in the classroom, they have the ability to look at their community and its role within the context of larger historical movements and moments of national significance. This experience has the potential to provide value-added learning to a classroom environment; it offers not just a multiplicity of …
Aimé Iglesias Lukin on the exhibition “Ullises Carrión: The Big Monster”
In Conversation Aimé Iglesias Lukin on the exhibition "Ullises Carrión: The Big Monster" María Paula Varela, Moderator LIVE STREAM Ulises Carrión: Post/Master, curated by María Paula Varela, Ph.D. Candidate in Art History, will be Ulises Carrión’s first public exhibition in the United States. Carrión was a crucial figure in Mail Art, a prominent international movement …
Peace Corps Application Workshop
In this event, The UF International Center will walk through the Peace Corps application and provide insight for the best applications. Registration here.
Museum Nights: Making HERstory
Celebrating the new exhibition Breaking the Frame: Women Artist in the Harn Collections, this evening of dance, visual art and creative exploration presents a range of dynamic voices that contribute to and reveal the her-story of art. Experience a virtual performance of Fragments, a dance work that explores the relationship between body and memory, then …
Workshop on Work in Progress: “Apartheid Drone” – Katherine Chandler (Georgetown University)
A draft article will be distributed the week prior to workshop participants Limit to 12 (grad students + faculty) Israeli drones were first tested by South African forces supported by Israeli contractors in the 1981 Operation Protea against the South West Africa People’s Organisation in Angola. This early reconnaissance drone built by Kentron, the armament …
The Political Thought of Victoria Woodhull – Dr. Lorna Bracewell
Dr. Lorna Bracewell is an associate professor at Flagler College who does research on feminism and political theory. She will present her latest book length project that is being published by the University of Minnesota Press in March 2021: Why We Lost the Sex Wars Sexual Freedom in the #MeToo Era. To better understand today’s …
UF History Workshop – Todo el Amor: Disability Internationalism in the FMLN
Heather Vrana This paper about El Salvador’s Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional political party will be an article draft for a special issue on youth and transnational history in Journal of Social History. Discussants TBA This event is open to all. To participate and receive the required Zoom link and precirculated reading, contact Professor Nancy …
Responding to Community Disaster: Prevention and Recovery
A university-wide event on community preparedness and recovery related to disaster, sponsored by UF/IFAS Extension. We are seeking participants from across the university, in a variety of disciplines, who engage in work that is associated with disaster preparation and response. Our goal is to increase collaboration and communication among UF faculty members who work in …
International Scholars Program: Info Session
Are you interested in internationalizing your UF experience, and enhancing your learning inside and outside the classroom? Would you like to acquire the knowledge and skills to become a global citizen, competitive professional, and UF alumni? Join the UF International Scholars Program and Peace Corps Prep Program! The International Scholars Program is a commencement medallion …
Kopano Ratele: “Orienting Frames: New Thoughts on (African) Psychologies”
Mixing Africa's Disciplines workshop at Center for African Studies Professor Kopano Ratele is the Director of the South African Medical Research Council Men, Injury and Violence Research Unit and Professor at the University of South Africa where he runs the Transdisciplinary African Psychologies Programme. His research, teaching, social-political activism, and community mobilization has focused on …
Careers in American Diplomacy: State Department Info Session with Diplomat in Residence, Sebron “CB” Toney
Are you interested in learning about careers or internship opportunities within the Department of State? Join our virtual info session with State Department Diplomat in Residence, CB Toney, to learn more! Register here.
POSTPONED Virtual Ethics Café on Reparations
POSTPONED TO SPRING 2021
ePortfolio Workshop: Getting Started
Join us for an ePortfolio Workshop through Zoom. We'll go over how to get started and how to navigate wix.com, what you'll need to include, and suggested guidelines for making a polished, reflective, and career-driven ePortfolio as part of the International Scholars Program and Peace Corps Prep. All workshops will be held virtually via Zoom. …
Fulbright Reflections and Impact
In celebration of International Education Week, the UF Fulbright Committee is pleased to announce, “Fulbright Reflections and Impact,” a panel open to Fulbrighters and the general public, where Fulbright alumni will share their insights, expertise, and Fulbright’s impact reflections on local and global communities. Please RSVP at UFFulbrightRSVP@gmail.com to receive a Zoom link.
Coffee Without Borders with ISP & HLA: What’s Cooking?
Grab a cup of tea or coffee and take a break with the International Scholars Program and Hispanic-Latinx Affairs! Participate in a cross-cultural event all about food and holidays from around the world, show off your favorite international snacks and recipes, and play trivia in this Coffee without Borders event. Zoom registration. Do you want …
Drone Publics: A Human-made Machine World – Katherine Chandler
How do drone technologies imagine an automated public sphere? This talk analyzes early experiments with drone aircraft to show how machine autonomy is predicated on the contradiction of “unmanning,” in which pilotless planes are defined by the “man” the technology claims to negate. This is highlighted in the ways race and colonialism are enmeshed with …
How to Keep Your Cool on a Warming Planet: A Conversation with Sarah Jaquette Ray
Drawing on a decade of experience leading and teaching in college environmental studies programs, Sarah Jaquette Ray’s book A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety (University of California Press, 2020) is an “existential toolkit” for the climate generation. Combining insights from psychology, sociology, social movements, mindfulness, and the environmental humanities, A Field Guide explains why and how we need to let …
2020-2021 FLDH Webinar Series: Beyond “Compare”: Exploring Drafts, Translations, and Variants in a University Repository Service
In 2018, the Florida State University Libraries created a digital interface for comparing versions of texts described according to the recommendations laid out by the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI). This interface was created as a tool for displaying genetic editions, which provide a dossier of multiple drafts and explore the revision process. However, the module, …
Storytelling to Find Your Why and Envision Your Aspirations
Technology and storytelling go hand in hand and always have. As long as there has been a way to share information, humans have used them to tell their own stories. Today, we are in an unprecendented phase of humanity where our ability to hear and engage in others' stories, as well as share our own, …
Exploring Career Pathways in the Humanities II: Imagine Ph.D. Workshop
Created by the Graduate Career Consortium, Imagine PhD is a free and leading online career exploration and planning tool for Ph.D. students in the humanities and social sciences. Through the platform of Imagine Ph.D. students can: Assess their career-related skills, interests, and values Explore careers paths appropriate to their disciplines Create self-defined goals Map out …
Pop Up (Virtual) Humanities Salon: The Christmas Chord!
This talk discusses the British Christmas tradition Nine Lessons and Carols and how one piece – O, Come All Ye Faithful, arranged by Sir David Willcocks — and one moment in particular has become infamous, internet famous, and beloved among listeners throughout the Anglophone world. Come join us for the Center for the Humanities and …
UF History Workshop – Jeffrey S. Adler
Jeff Adler, Professor of History shares this essay draft on the history of American police brutality, written for an edited volume. He is interested in exploring how he might further develop the essay as a book. From the University of Iowa’s Department of History: Simon Balto is a scholar of policing and the carceral in African …
How to Create Fundable Grant Proposals: A Grantwriting Series
Building on 15 years of developing workflows and systems for managing all aspects of library grantseeking at the University of Arizona and University of Florida, this grant webinar series will share best practices including checklist examples for guidelines and workflows, funding alerts describing funding opportunities for libraries, and templates for sharing submitted and pending proposals …
Celebrating the Life and Work of Dr. Patricia Hilliard-Nunn
More information, including Zoom registration details, forthcoming. We welcome you to send memories and photos for inclusion in the service to events@clas.ufl.edu.